Hello all, sorry if this has been asked before but I'm kinda new to Revit, I've tried googling but im think im missing the exact terms to google for.
I was suddenly tasked to do a signage/wayfinding project on a currently ongoing building project, and im kind of confused of what would be the smarter approach. All signs/branding art are being done on Illustrator, and it was requested that I'd use the projects template sheet in a RVT file to present the work..
However, being that the building design is still not finished and will still change, I was planning to use the architectural RVT file as a XREF (linked I suppose. I'm old, more familiar with autocad lingo) and if possible even use the same sheets (with the same plans, section views, and layout to maintain a familiarity with the overall project), but just hiding the originals annotations, dimensions etc so I can do my own annotations. This way I stay clear of messing with the original revit file
For example on a plan view instead of having materials symbols and annotations for like a bathroom I'd have only own tag indicating that that door has a "xx-yy-01"/men's restrooms plaque, which can be found on a new sheet that I've created with all the plaques I created on illustrator as pdf inserts
My only idea would be to insert the original Revit file as linked and draw on top, but I don't know if that's the proper BIM way of doing stuff. That's what I usually do if it was autocad... I tried doing this but a lot of stuff from the architecture project was annotations and not showing up after I link the file (like dashed lines for ceiling projections etc), and other things like axis and section markers are showing up different from the original one.
Also if possible I'd MUCH prefer to stay on revit LT...
you could hide specific annotations by the VG shortcut of your linked revit, but that is not possible in Revit LT.
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Vitor Bortoncello | Arquiteto | Especialista BIM
Autodesk Certified Professional
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